I think eviction notices are usually served after rent has not been paid for a month, but try talking to your landlord personally about your situation and see if the landlord can cut you a little slack by offering to let you be a little bit late. My mom gets paid the week after the 1st of the month and her landlord understands and allows her to pay a week late because he knows she will have the money then. But if your landlord is not as lenient...I'd either get a better job or a second job, or I'd ask a friend if you can move in with them and split the rent. Or just find a roommate. Having a roommate is a quick way to split your bills in half. But you have to make sure your roommate is reliable and responsible enough to keep paying the rent and not leave you hangin.
2006-09-03 10:45:27
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answer #1
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answered by Jenn 6
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Legally, your landlord ought to abide via the lease settlement. in the journey that your lease specifies a grace era or a time period which will start up the eviction procedure, then your landlord won't be able to commence before that. in the journey that your lease would not say some thing, then legally the owner can serve you with a three day pay or stop observe once you're a million day overdue. in case you do not pay in the three days, your landlord can start up eviction and at that element your landlord can refuse to settle for price. I recommend you communicate over with your landlord or the place of work that manages your construction. maximum landlords do not prefer to evict you, they choose you to stay and pay your lease month after month. Evicting you prices the owner money (courtroom costs, time, and so on), letting you stay makes them money via lease. So if a landlord has self belief that you're going to compensate for lease and stay modern-day in the destiny, they're very not likely to evict you. attempt providing them the $one hundred forty now, with an settlement that you'll pay some thing, plus overdue costs on the fifteenth.
2016-12-06 08:00:12
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answer #2
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answered by luby 4
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In some cities it takes up to 6 months to evict a person.
2006-09-03 10:42:41
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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before they can evict you they will have to have a court order take about 30 to 60 days. why don't you ask your co-worker if they know of anyone that can share the rent with you as a room-mate.
2006-09-03 10:48:42
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answer #4
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answered by ladybug 6
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I got evicted a month ago for nonpayment of rent it took them a month to evivct me... If you have a job it should be no problem to find an weekly rate motel to stay in till u find a place.. thats what I did.
2006-09-03 12:17:52
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answer #5
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answered by gingersnaps624 2
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have you tried going to talk to your landlord? sometimes they can be understanding. if that doesn't work, my apartment complex gives you 10 days after your rent is due before they start the eviction process and then you usually have 30 days to vacate the building.
2006-09-03 10:45:22
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answer #6
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answered by Sexy Lexy 3
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30 days
2006-09-03 10:54:18
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answer #7
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answered by MsJ 5
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you Will get an evict notice in which you Willl have to go to court,judge wil give you a time frame of 30 days then a three day notice to move will come
2006-09-03 10:46:34
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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too bad sorry.
2006-09-03 10:49:40
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answer #9
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answered by C-Lay "L" 2
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